The district plans to release the results to parents before they are announced to the general public.

“We felt it was important to talk with parents directly,” said Michael Vaughn, a district spokesman.

Last month, Denver Public Schools announced it had asked the state to look into previous years’ CSAP test scores at the two schools after the district’s own intensive review turned up irregularities.

Superintendent Tom Boasberg has repeatedly said the district’s in-house review was not triggered by any suspicion or accusation, but was done in response to cheating scandals in other metropolitan districts around the country.

The district review examined the number of times wrong test answers were erased and changed to correct answers.

Beach Court, and its principal Frank Roti, had made headlines in past years for achieving astounding academic growth — as reflected in standardized test scores — in a student population that included large numbers of poor and non-English-speaking children.